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Ohio Jewish chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1975-09-11

Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1975-09-11, page 01

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VOL. 53 NO. 38
SEPTEMBER 11, 1975 - TISHREI 6
Ford Asks Leaders Of Both Parties To I Approve Stationing U.S. Personnel In Sinai
The Day Of Atonement
Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, is the most- solemn of Jewish feasts. Enjoined in the Bible, where it is described as a "Sabbath of Solemn Rest," it falls this year on'Sept. 15, and marks the culmination of the Ten Days of Penitence which begin on Rosh Hashanah. Work as well as eating and drinking are strictly for- ' bidden on Yom Kippur, which is spent in the synagogue in prayer for forgiveness of sins and reconciliation with both God and fellow man.
RELIGIOUS NEWS SERVICE PHOTO
By Joseph Polakoff
WASHINGTON (JTA) - President Ford asked leaders of both parties in Congress last week to adopt a joint resolution approving the stationing of up to 200 American civilians in the Sinai desert as part of the second Sinai accord between Israel and Egypt.'
The President also in¬ dicated at a White House briefing, according to Sen. Robert Byrd (D. W.Va.), deputy majority * leader in the Senate, that the foreign aid bill of assistance to Israel and its Arab neigh¬ bors will go to Congress after the issue of an American presence in the Sinai is settled by Congress. Byrd said that the aid package for Israel will total between $2.2
billion and $2.3 billion of which $1.5 billion will be in military assistance. No mention was made of the amount the U.S. will expend to provide oil for Israel but this will be included in the aid package..
The figure mentioned for Israel is about $l billion less than the amount Israeli officials had indicated last month Israel would need for
Israel, Egypt Sign Accord In Geneva
By Edwin Eytan second disengagement
GENEVA (JTA) — Israel ' agreement' in the Council
and Egypt,, signed ' their Chamber'of the Palais des
Results Of Israel-Egypt Pact
ALEXANDRIA — Map depicts changes in buffer zones in Sin&i resulting from Sept. 1 pact formally initialed by Israeli and Egyptian diplomats.,'
Egyptian forces are permitted to advance to eastern edgeof old buffer zone set up in 1974, while Israelis are to withdraw from strategic Gidi and Mitla Passes.
Inset at right shows surveillance stations operated by Israel and Egypt and three tactical "watch stations" operated by the United States. The Abu Rudeis oil fields in lower Sinai, from which Israel has withdrawn, is under United Nations control but can be entered by Egyptian civilians.
RELIGIOUS NEWS SERVICE-PHOTO
Nations here at 5 p.m. local time Sept. 4, The ceremonies were brief,--cool and. strictly • according toprotocol with no speeches, handshakes or congratulatory remarks before or after the signings. The two delegations faced each other across a table with Gen.' Ensio Siilasvuo, commander of the United Nations peace-keeping forces' in the Middle East, seated between them.
The two superpowers, the United States and the Soviet Union, co-chairmen of the Geneva . Peace Conference on the Middle East, were absent from the ceremonies. The U.S. announced this morning that it would not attend, although Jts representative, Deputy Secretary of State Alfred Atherton had already arrived in Geneva for that purpose. He conferred for nearly three hours with the Israeli delegation before the signing ceremonies, ap¬ parently to explain the reasons for America's ab¬ sence.
The Soviet Union an¬ nounced earlier that it would boycott the signing because it "wants no part of responsibility" for the pact. Moscow officially informed Syria and the Palestine Liberation Organization of its decision. According to reliable sources, - the U.S. decided at the last minute not to attend the signing in order to avoid the ap¬ pearance of a breach of cooperation with the Soviets in the Mideast. Minutes before' the ceremony begari, UN officials removed the
(CONTINUED ON PAGE Ml
the current fiscal year. Byrd also disclosed that the aid package will include bet-, ween $650 million and $800 million for Egypt. He said this would be "non-military" aid for now.
Byrd also said that no mention was made at the "White House meeting of funds for Jordan and Syria' but that Jordan insists, on getting 14 Hawk missile
Carol Lister
served as Chairman of the Metropolitan Washington ADL Council, Editor of its Newsletter, and was a member of the D.C.¬ Maryland Regional Ad¬ visory Board.
Long . active in in¬ terreligious activities, she has organized Jewish- Catholic conferences at St.
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 11)
New ADL Director Named
Columbus, Ohio, August
29...Carol Lister has been
appointed Regional Director
of the Ohio-Kentucky office
of the Anti-Defamation
League of B'nai B'rith,
Theodore B. Marks,
Chairman of -the Board,
announced recently. Ms. Lister has been, since
1968, Associate Director of
the League's D.C. —
Maryland Regional office in ,
Washington, D.C. She has, ,. prpyi,ded,s- consultative/ ser- - vices to local and regional'
school systems, churches
and organizations for human
relations training,
development of program¬ matic materials and
curricula, tension and rumor
control and has served as
national Program liaison
with federal government
agencies, the National
Education Association,
United States Catholic
Conference- and other
national organizations based
in the nation's capital. An honor graduate of New
York University, Ms. Lister
is a writer and research
consultant. She has handled
press relations in political
campaigns and has served
as Copy Chief and Associate
Radio-TV Director of ad¬ vertising agencies in New
York and Washington. She
has served as faculty ad¬ visor for District of
Columbia Teachers College;.
Consultant to the Maryland
State Board of Education;
Workshop Director for
Montgomery, Prince
Georges, Baltimore and
Fairfax Counties, four of the
nation's largest public
school systems. She served
as Coordinator for the
United States Civil Service
Commission women's equal
rights program with federal 1 .agencies.
Ms. Lister has authored
articles on human relations
for ADL and community
media and has performed
numerous speaking ' and
consultative engagements
on the League's behalf. Prior
to her professional
association with ADL, she
installations, or it will go to the Soviet Union for assistance. Byrd said that this was stated by King Hussein in a letter to Sen. Mike Mansfield (D. Mont.), the Senate majority leader, and others.
House Speaker Carl Albert (D. Okla.) and Byrd both indicated that Soviet ob¬ jections to the second-stage Sinai agreement were not too important. Byrd said that he did not know whether the Soviet objections "are proforma or not. That remains to be seen. This could be expected. I^don't think this should be a factor, of weighty consideration." Asked what was next in the Middle East'on the part of the U.S., Byrd said "there is no timetable." ~He added, however, that it was clear thai continuous political momentum is required and that "Egypt expects to get all of its territory back." _
Albert, who earlier had indicated reservations about the stationing, of .American- civilians in the Sinai, said that he -told the President that "I will support him on this." He said it was a calculated risk but one worth taking.
Albert noted there was no discussion about civilian monitors on Israel's fron¬ tiers with Syria and Jordan. Sen. John Sparkman (D. Ala.), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 11)
The World VWfcek
NEW YORK (JTA) — A group of Jewish feminists warned Aug. 26 that a Soviet-sponsored "conference of socialist feminists" scheduled for East Berlin in Oc¬ tober may be used as a forum for anti>Jewish, anti- Israel and anti-Zionist activities as was the recent United Nations-sponsored International Women's. Conference in Mexico City. The New York Chapter of the Jewish Feminist Organization, a national group which defines itself as defending the rights of Jewish women everywhere declared at a press conference that it will serve "as a watchguard for the Jewish community to work to forestall the manipulation of -■ feminists everywhere as pawns" in the Arab attack on Israel. The group began circulating a petition denouncing the "Declaration of Mexico" for attacking Zionism and Israel and linking them with colonialism, imperialism and apartheid.
NEW YORK (JTA) - Anatoly Malkin, a 21-year-old Moscow activist, was sentenced Aug. 26 after a oneT day trial to three years in prison for "draft evasion," it was reported here Aug. 27 by the National Conference on Soviet Jewry. The sentence, which followed a two- year sentence for Lev Roitburd, a 39-year-old Odessa < activist, was denounced by Jerry Goodman, executive director of the NCSJ, and the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry. "Soviet authorities are waging a war of repression and arrests, whose face bears little resemblance to that presented to the West at the recently concluded Conference on European Security and Cooperation," Goodman-said.
.tUij!ix*iwif<iJ>'v?<2,r'isf':

li
'
1
IJl\// Saving Columbus and Central Ohio Jewish Community for Over 50 Years \Jl\L
iLi83AvaE_MrisBH,8To,"oAL s°°>">.
LS. o. 4321 f.. „
VOL. 53 NO. 38
SEPTEMBER 11, 1975 - TISHREI 6
Ford Asks Leaders Of Both Parties To I Approve Stationing U.S. Personnel In Sinai
The Day Of Atonement
Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, is the most- solemn of Jewish feasts. Enjoined in the Bible, where it is described as a "Sabbath of Solemn Rest," it falls this year on'Sept. 15, and marks the culmination of the Ten Days of Penitence which begin on Rosh Hashanah. Work as well as eating and drinking are strictly for- ' bidden on Yom Kippur, which is spent in the synagogue in prayer for forgiveness of sins and reconciliation with both God and fellow man.
RELIGIOUS NEWS SERVICE PHOTO
By Joseph Polakoff
WASHINGTON (JTA) - President Ford asked leaders of both parties in Congress last week to adopt a joint resolution approving the stationing of up to 200 American civilians in the Sinai desert as part of the second Sinai accord between Israel and Egypt.'
The President also in¬ dicated at a White House briefing, according to Sen. Robert Byrd (D. W.Va.), deputy majority * leader in the Senate, that the foreign aid bill of assistance to Israel and its Arab neigh¬ bors will go to Congress after the issue of an American presence in the Sinai is settled by Congress. Byrd said that the aid package for Israel will total between $2.2
billion and $2.3 billion of which $1.5 billion will be in military assistance. No mention was made of the amount the U.S. will expend to provide oil for Israel but this will be included in the aid package..
The figure mentioned for Israel is about $l billion less than the amount Israeli officials had indicated last month Israel would need for
Israel, Egypt Sign Accord In Geneva
By Edwin Eytan second disengagement
GENEVA (JTA) — Israel ' agreement' in the Council
and Egypt,, signed ' their Chamber'of the Palais des
Results Of Israel-Egypt Pact
ALEXANDRIA — Map depicts changes in buffer zones in Sin&i resulting from Sept. 1 pact formally initialed by Israeli and Egyptian diplomats.,'
Egyptian forces are permitted to advance to eastern edgeof old buffer zone set up in 1974, while Israelis are to withdraw from strategic Gidi and Mitla Passes.
Inset at right shows surveillance stations operated by Israel and Egypt and three tactical "watch stations" operated by the United States. The Abu Rudeis oil fields in lower Sinai, from which Israel has withdrawn, is under United Nations control but can be entered by Egyptian civilians.
RELIGIOUS NEWS SERVICE-PHOTO
Nations here at 5 p.m. local time Sept. 4, The ceremonies were brief,--cool and. strictly • according toprotocol with no speeches, handshakes or congratulatory remarks before or after the signings. The two delegations faced each other across a table with Gen.' Ensio Siilasvuo, commander of the United Nations peace-keeping forces' in the Middle East, seated between them.
The two superpowers, the United States and the Soviet Union, co-chairmen of the Geneva . Peace Conference on the Middle East, were absent from the ceremonies. The U.S. announced this morning that it would not attend, although Jts representative, Deputy Secretary of State Alfred Atherton had already arrived in Geneva for that purpose. He conferred for nearly three hours with the Israeli delegation before the signing ceremonies, ap¬ parently to explain the reasons for America's ab¬ sence.
The Soviet Union an¬ nounced earlier that it would boycott the signing because it "wants no part of responsibility" for the pact. Moscow officially informed Syria and the Palestine Liberation Organization of its decision. According to reliable sources, - the U.S. decided at the last minute not to attend the signing in order to avoid the ap¬ pearance of a breach of cooperation with the Soviets in the Mideast. Minutes before' the ceremony begari, UN officials removed the
(CONTINUED ON PAGE Ml
the current fiscal year. Byrd also disclosed that the aid package will include bet-, ween $650 million and $800 million for Egypt. He said this would be "non-military" aid for now.
Byrd also said that no mention was made at the "White House meeting of funds for Jordan and Syria' but that Jordan insists, on getting 14 Hawk missile
Carol Lister
served as Chairman of the Metropolitan Washington ADL Council, Editor of its Newsletter, and was a member of the D.C.¬ Maryland Regional Ad¬ visory Board.
Long . active in in¬ terreligious activities, she has organized Jewish- Catholic conferences at St.
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 11)
New ADL Director Named
Columbus, Ohio, August
29...Carol Lister has been
appointed Regional Director
of the Ohio-Kentucky office
of the Anti-Defamation
League of B'nai B'rith,
Theodore B. Marks,
Chairman of -the Board,
announced recently. Ms. Lister has been, since
1968, Associate Director of
the League's D.C. —
Maryland Regional office in ,
Washington, D.C. She has, ,. prpyi,ded,s- consultative/ ser- - vices to local and regional'
school systems, churches
and organizations for human
relations training,
development of program¬ matic materials and
curricula, tension and rumor
control and has served as
national Program liaison
with federal government
agencies, the National
Education Association,
United States Catholic
Conference- and other
national organizations based
in the nation's capital. An honor graduate of New
York University, Ms. Lister
is a writer and research
consultant. She has handled
press relations in political
campaigns and has served
as Copy Chief and Associate
Radio-TV Director of ad¬ vertising agencies in New
York and Washington. She
has served as faculty ad¬ visor for District of
Columbia Teachers College;.
Consultant to the Maryland
State Board of Education;
Workshop Director for
Montgomery, Prince
Georges, Baltimore and
Fairfax Counties, four of the
nation's largest public
school systems. She served
as Coordinator for the
United States Civil Service
Commission women's equal
rights program with federal 1 .agencies.
Ms. Lister has authored
articles on human relations
for ADL and community
media and has performed
numerous speaking ' and
consultative engagements
on the League's behalf. Prior
to her professional
association with ADL, she
installations, or it will go to the Soviet Union for assistance. Byrd said that this was stated by King Hussein in a letter to Sen. Mike Mansfield (D. Mont.), the Senate majority leader, and others.
House Speaker Carl Albert (D. Okla.) and Byrd both indicated that Soviet ob¬ jections to the second-stage Sinai agreement were not too important. Byrd said that he did not know whether the Soviet objections "are proforma or not. That remains to be seen. This could be expected. I^don't think this should be a factor, of weighty consideration." Asked what was next in the Middle East'on the part of the U.S., Byrd said "there is no timetable." ~He added, however, that it was clear thai continuous political momentum is required and that "Egypt expects to get all of its territory back." _
Albert, who earlier had indicated reservations about the stationing, of .American- civilians in the Sinai, said that he -told the President that "I will support him on this." He said it was a calculated risk but one worth taking.
Albert noted there was no discussion about civilian monitors on Israel's fron¬ tiers with Syria and Jordan. Sen. John Sparkman (D. Ala.), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 11)
The World VWfcek
NEW YORK (JTA) — A group of Jewish feminists warned Aug. 26 that a Soviet-sponsored "conference of socialist feminists" scheduled for East Berlin in Oc¬ tober may be used as a forum for anti>Jewish, anti- Israel and anti-Zionist activities as was the recent United Nations-sponsored International Women's. Conference in Mexico City. The New York Chapter of the Jewish Feminist Organization, a national group which defines itself as defending the rights of Jewish women everywhere declared at a press conference that it will serve "as a watchguard for the Jewish community to work to forestall the manipulation of -■ feminists everywhere as pawns" in the Arab attack on Israel. The group began circulating a petition denouncing the "Declaration of Mexico" for attacking Zionism and Israel and linking them with colonialism, imperialism and apartheid.
NEW YORK (JTA) - Anatoly Malkin, a 21-year-old Moscow activist, was sentenced Aug. 26 after a oneT day trial to three years in prison for "draft evasion," it was reported here Aug. 27 by the National Conference on Soviet Jewry. The sentence, which followed a two- year sentence for Lev Roitburd, a 39-year-old Odessa < activist, was denounced by Jerry Goodman, executive director of the NCSJ, and the Student Struggle for Soviet Jewry. "Soviet authorities are waging a war of repression and arrests, whose face bears little resemblance to that presented to the West at the recently concluded Conference on European Security and Cooperation," Goodman-said.
.tUij!ix*iwif'v?<2,r'isf':